Pushkin's Second Wife: And Other Micronovels

Yuri Druzhnikov

In an afterword Druzhnikov argues for a new genre, the micronovel, roughly
defined as something the size of a short story with the plot of a novel,
but the pieces in Pushkin's Second Wife are really just short stories,
or perhaps, in the case of the eighty-page title piece, a novella.

The two longest stories, which bracket the collection, juxtapose American
cluelessness about Russia and the Soviet Union with the latter's
own contradictions and incomprehensibilities. In the title piece a
US graduate student and a Soviet museum worker come together briefly
through the contrivances of their colleagues, with major consequences
for both of them. And the final story features an American policeman
whose marriage to a Russian exchange student is followed by a dramatic
honeymoon in the Caucasus, in the middle of war-torn Abkhazia. These two
stories are entertaining but to my mind among the less compelling pieces
in the collection: perhaps because Druzhnikov had been living in the
United States for only three years when this collection was published,
his American protagonists don't seem entirely convincing.

The other eight stories, ranging from 22 to 30 pages in length, centre
on individuals (all men) and their jobs: a writer reads the diaries of
the man who censored his work; a retired actor is called back for one
last performance; an Academician visits a regional library to do some
research and has a fling with one of the librarians; a man on a business
trip has to juggle a potential romance, a technical flash of insight,
and the chance for a good night's sleep; a taxi-driver takes his young
daughter on his round, with the circulation of money illustrating
the corruption involved; a school teacher retires, illustrating the
hollowness of status and its adulation; and a clerk in a planning bureau
is desperate to find any kind of alternative employment, whether as clown
or as computer programmer. The domestic lives of the protagonists are
mostly more incidental, but the overall effect is a kind of mosaic of
life in the Soviet Union right at its end.